It’s true that these houses – ancient and/or modern, sometimes with western influences here and there – are not what the most Japanese live in, but going in not expecting it to be so I still found it really enjoyable. The Nakamura House feels the most everyday and normal, and I wouldn’t mind living in that one. The rest are at least something you want to watch, here or where they are. The location map at the start of the book tells you kind of where each place is, and at the end is some glossary and addresses. All text are in English, German, or French, inside (which also means each text you prefer to read is not long).
There are 13 places in this book, some in the city, some not. Each place has at least one building; each place gets a small introduction telling about it, who built it, what’s its use, etc. You notice how calm, quiet, near-nature of some sort, clean and orderly, the use of lights and shadows, the objects, the outside view of it, and the variety of materials used (with some centred around a certain color or material – stone, bamboo, wood etc.). I love how so many place have garden views to contemplate if you’re there.
Places like: traditional inns and bathing houses, former princely estate now inn-restaurant, shrine home, shrines to modern art, artist’s house, garden museum, a thatched farmhouse moved to this location, 1950s Japanese Modernist home, a zen hermitage villa…
And things like: lanterns, stone paths, painted folding screens, all those beautiful bath tubs, flower arrangements, an ancient street well, seagrass slippers, old roof tiles, a Meiji-era postbox, tea ceremony things...
The places often feel like introvert dreams. Minimalists would also love many of these places. Some for sure feel bare, but sometimes that might be because they are being photographed for the book. How many photos each place gets vary, but all have enough. I do wonder about some windows that seem to have no curtains or other ways to keep part of what’s inside out of view if needed… But both those who want traditional and those who want modern stuff will get a fill here. I like both, and loved what I got here (so much to like). Truly satisfying.